India’s weapons-buying is frequently crippled by “multiple and diffused structures with no single point accountability, multiple decision-heads, duplication of processes, delayed comments, delayed execution, no real-time monitoring, no project-based approach and a tendency to fault-find rather than to facilitate,” assesses a very candid Defence Ministry report. As a result of these flaws, the government’s flagship ‘Make in India’ initiative for the defence sector, launched in 2014, “continues to languish at the altar of procedural delays and has failed to demonstrate its true potential.”
The 27-point internal report prepared late in 2017 by Minister of State for Defence Subhash Bhamre is a stinging indictment of the way the Defence Ministry functions. Of 144 projects in the last three financial years, “only 8-10% fructified within the stipulated time period.” Significantly, a chart identifies how each step of the nine-stage process of ordering weaponry sees enormous delays.
From the stage of Request for Proposal (RFP), when the government formally reaches out to OEMs to submit their proposal to the deal-closing clearance given by the Competent Financial Authority, the delays are a whopping 2.6 times to 15.4 times the deadline set.
The problems actually begin at the level of the headquarters of the individual armed forces, when the demand for new purchases is first raised. Pointing at a “lack of synergy between the three services”, the report says that the Army, Air Force, Navy and Coast Guard do not work as a system, which “puts greater strain on the limited defence budget and as a result, we are unable to meet the critical capability requirements.”
The Tejas LCA
What is more, different departments of the ministry “appear to be working in independent silos” driven by their interpretation of policy and procedures. Thereafter, once a weapons purchase enters the Request for Proposal’ (RFP) stage, the average time taken to clear files is 120 weeks or six times more than rules laid down by the MoD in 2016. “The fastest RFP clearance was accorded in 17 weeks while the slowest took a monumental 422 weeks (over eight years),” the report noted.
The report points out that the Armed Forces, as eventual users of the weapon systems, “continue to view the Acquisition Wing (of the Defence Ministry) as an obstacle rather than a facilitator”. So there needs to be a “tectonic change in mindset of the ministry officials and the need of the hour is assigning responsibility and accountability.” At the level of Trials and Evaluation conducted by the Armed forces, “the average time taken is 89 weeks, which is three times more than authorized.” The armed forces are a part of the problem here, as they list “ambiguous trial directives, leaving scope for varied interpretation.”
Dr Bhamre observes in his report that the Technical Oversight Committee (TOC) stage needs to be done away with altogether. “I am not sure whether any TOC has brought up any relevant issue, and is assessed to be yet another delay in the procurement procedure. “The Cost Negotiation Committee (CNC) stage sees delays about 10 times more than that allowed because of the inability of the Defence Ministry to benchmark costs with global standards especially where an item is being procured for the first time or involved Transfer of Technology.”
Shockingly, even if a weapons system actually makes its way through this bureaucratic quagmire, an acquisition can be “shot down” when the file reaches the Finance Ministry or the Cabinet Committee of Security since “currently, the MoF or CCS is not aware” of the defence ministry’s plans and needs. The report also flags the “raining of numerous queries, a few of them even of a basic nature.”
In other words, the Finance Ministry does not seem to have any idea of what to do with a complex agreement once it is presented by the Defence Ministry for financial clearance so that a contract can be signed. Given the fairly hopeless bureaucratic jumble within the government, the report lists a series of remedies to de-clutter the process, revolving around “accountability” and “ownership”, to ensure the purchase of weapons can realistically be expected. But ridding the government of this debilitating red-tape will not be easy.
Saab’s Gripen D on takeoff
Very recently, 17 years after the Air Force stated a requirement for 126 new gen fighters, the Defence Ministry stalled the process to build more than 100 of these jets in India under Make in India’. The two main firms competing for this requirement were America’s Lockheed Martin, which offered its F-16 Block 70IN fighter, and Sweden’s SAAB, which was competing with its Gripen E/F multi-role combat aircraft.
Now, the government wants the Indian Air Force to “broaden the scope” of its RFI to also include multi-engine fighters, a decision taken soon after the controversy over the Rafale fighter deal where the government was accused by the opposition of not being transparent in its handling of the contract with the French government.
For the Indian Air Force, which is seeing its squadron strength fall drastically because older jets need to be retired, there is a strange sense of deja-vu about this all. In 2001, the IAF had projected its requirement under the Medium Range Combat Aircraft (MRCA) deal for single-engine jet fighters. The scope of the deal changed dramatically when the government said that they wanted to include twin-engine fighters in the IAF’s fighter evaluation. Since win-engine jets are heavier and more capable, “MRCA” warped into “MMRCA,” or Medium Multirole Combat Aircraft, a programme which was ultimately scrapped altogether in 2015, after an incredible 15-year process. Finally, in 2015, realising that the Indian Air Force was desperate, the government agreed, controversially, to directly buy 36 Rafale fighters from France in an off-the-shelf purchase worth more than Rs. 58,000 crores.
Lockheed Martin F-16 with afterburner
But there still remained a some semblance of hope because in October 2016, the government had also began a new process for single-engine fighters, which would be acquired in significantly larger numbers, made in India and bought at considerably lower per-unit costs.
With the decision to confuse this programme (with a new RFI issued in April 2018) and given the ministry’s own track record, it seems clear that the Indian Air Force will not be inducting any new type of fighter for several years to come other than the indigenous Tejas LCA, which is smaller and arguably less capable than variants of the F-16 or Gripen that the Air Force is really looking to acquire.
Vishnu Som, as assessed by NDTV. Photos: Angad Singh